Miami Herald (Sunday)

Devils rally, beat Rangers in OT

- From Miami Herald Wire Services

The New Jersey Devils were well aware they were playing poorly at home.

Coach Lindy Ruff spent most of Friday reminding his players they hadn’t won at the Prudential Center since Dec. 6, and if that wasn’t enough, the fans were clearly unhappy.

The Devils did something about it Saturday, rallying from two-goals down in the third period and beating the rival New York Rangers 4-3 to snap an eight-game (0-7-1) winless streak at home.

Damon Severson provided the game-winner with 2:13 left in overtime while Jesper Bratt started the comeback with a powerplay goal and Jack Hughes forced the overtime with his second of the game.

“We had a couple of games here at home where as a team we couldn’t find a way to win,” Bratt said. “This was a huge rivalry game, a playoff-type game. We really needed this extra point. It was huge for us.”

Hughes said the Devils didn’t start the way they wanted, giving up an early goal and not taking the lead until overtime.

“We wanted to take anything we could get,” said Hughes, who has eight goals in five games. “So, it happened to be a comeback win and like I said, that was a pretty crazy crowd today. It’s a lot of fun playing the Rangers, so when you get to beat them, that’s kind of a statement win, too.”

Blue Jackets 4, Hurricanes 3 (SO): Kirill Marchenko recorded his first career hat trick and scored in a shootout to lift Columbus over Carolina in a matchup of the Metropolit­an Division’s best and worst teams.

ACarolina, which sits atop the division, has now lost three straight. Patrik Laine scored in the shootout, and Kent Johnson added the shootout game-winner and two assists for the Blue Jackets, who won for just the second time in their past 11 games.

Joonas Korpisalo stopped 39 shots. Max Pacioretty had two goals and Brady Skjei scored on the power play for Carolina. Antti Raanta stopped 15 shots in his first loss since Nov. 17.

Red Wings.

“He stole the game,” star defenseman Aaron Ekblad said Friday. “They had some fantastic chances and he came up huge.”

So did Ekblad, with two goals — both the go-ahead tally and the game-winner — on the power play and star center Aleksander Barkov, who delivered the primary assist on both of Ekblad’s goals. Throw in another goal from star defenseman Gustav Forsling and an assist from star defenseman Brandon Montour, and the Panthers got key contributi­ons from just about every one of their best players to win in Detroit.

Ultimately, Florida (1818-4) wants to win because of its depth and with complete efforts, but sometimes it takes individual excellence — something the Panthers lacked a bit too frequently early in the season — and Florida’s past few wins have been powered by some of those great singular performanc­es.

The Panthers’ lone win last week — a rout of the lowly Montreal Canadiens — came after Barkov notched a hat trick in the first period. Their win against the Arizona

Coyotes on Tuesday in Sunrise came on the strength of a hat trick by right wing Matthew Tkachuk, who was named to the 2023 NHL All-Star Game on Thursday. To put together just its fourth winning streak of the season to start the weekend, Florida got a few more excellent performanc­es from Ekblad, Barkov and Bobrovsky.

After injuries and subpar play plagued a litany of these stars in the first few months of the season, the Panthers’ best players are finally playing like it. Now, Florida needs to make it translate into more wins and will have a chance for its first three-game winning streak of the season Sunday when it faces the Dallas Stars at 3 p.m. at the American Airlines Center in Texas.

“It’s great to score some goals and stuff like that, make some good plays and feel the confidence coming, but you’ve just got to do it every night,” Barkov said last week. “You can’t have any off nights anymore. You’ve got to be better prepared and play the right way against good teams.”

The Stars (23-11-6) certainly qualify, with the best record in the Central Division and a .694 points percentage in Dallas for the sixth best home points percentage in the NHL. Even though the Panthers still lead the NHL in shots per game, there’s no guarantee they’ll outshoot a team like the Stars — even the Red Wings outshot them by 11 — and those games are the ones when the best players need to deliver.

For the past week, those stars have been trending in the right direction.

Before he scored a pair of power-play goals this week, Ekblad hadn’t scored on a power play since before Halloween and had only one all year — in one night, he tripled his power-play goals and scored a full third of his total goals this year. Tkachuk’s hat trick earlier this week was his first for Florida and boosted his season-long point total up to 47 — he has eight points in his past six games. Barkov’s hat trick came in his first game back after missing nearly two weeks and he now has eight points in five games since his return from a lower-body injury — he was averaging fewer than a point per game before his absence.

All three feel a responsibi­lity to lift this team to greater heights.

“I have to be a lot better,” Tkachuk said Tuesday. “I have a lot more to give on another level.”

No skater, however, can make as big an individual difference as a great goalie, and Bobrovsky played like his best self at the Red Wings.

It wasn’t an outlier, either. In his past eight starts, Bobrovsky owns a .917 save percentage and notched at least 29 saves in half of those games.

On paper, the Panthers have too much talent to be as bad a team as they are right now. The problem has been that those onpaper stars haven’t actually played like they’re expected for most of this season. At least, not until now.

“We’ve got some guys back in the lineup, we’re a lot more healthy now,” Barkov said, “and we have a really good team.”

David Wilson: 305-376-3406, @DBWilson2

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